It reported that a person claiming to have worked for Lyft used anonymous app Blind to post the allegations. There is no verification process for posting on Blind, leaving wide open the possibility that the complaint, and its supposed source, is bogus.

Regardless, Lyft said it would look into the claims which suggested employees could “check to see if their significant other actually went where they said, and stalk attractive people they’ve met”.

‘Trust of passengers’

In a statement, Lyft defended its data security measures.

“Maintaining the trust of passengers and drivers is fundamental to Lyft,” spokeswoman Alexandra LaManna said in an email.

“The specific allegations in this post would be a violation of Lyft’s policies and a cause for termination, and have not been raised with our legal or executive teams.”

Controversy over the data collection of ride-sharing companies, and who within the firms can access it, has been under scrutiny before.

Lyft’s equivalent customer records system did not offer map-based, real-tin tracking of journeys, and access to the information within the company was limited, Lyft said.

“Access to data is restricted to certain teams that need it to do their jobs. For those teams, each query is logged and attributed to a specific individual,” the company said.

“We require employees to be trained in our data privacy practices and responsible use policy, which categorically prohibit accessing and using customer data for reasons other than those required by their specific role at the company.

“Employees are required to sign confidentiality and responsible use agreements that bar them from accessing, using, or disclosing customer data outside the confines of their job responsibilities,” it added.